ESET Named Top Player in Radicati´s APT Protection Market Quadrant
ESET has been named a Top Player in Radicati´s APT Protection Market Quadrant 2024, covering the advanced persistent threat (APT) protection segment of the security market.
ESET has been named a Top Player in Radicati´s APT Protection Market Quadrant 2024, covering the advanced persistent threat (APT) protection segment of the security market.
Sonia Domínguez Waisbrod, the writer at ESET explains here what drives cybercriminals to relentlessly target the personal information of other people and why you need to guard your data like your life depends on it.
STARMUS, powered by ESET, announced an unparalleled program for its seventh edition, which is set to be the most inspiring debate on the future of our home planet. As announced in May 2023, the prestigious STARMUS festival – the brainchild of astrophysicist Garik Israelian, PhD,
ESET achieved great success when named a Leader in IDC MarketScape: Worldwide Modern Endpoint Security for Small Businesses 2024 Vendor Assessment (doc #US50521424, March 2024).
ESET researchers have discovered a cyberespionage campaign that, since at least September 2023, has been victimizing Tibetans via a targeted watering hole (also known as a strategic web compromise), and a supply-chain compromise to deliver trojanized installers of Tibetan language translation software.
Márk Szabó, PR and Security Writer at ESET explains that as adversaries increasingly set their sights on vulnerable enterprise VPN software to infiltrate corporate networks, concerns mount about VPNs themselves being a source of cyber risk.
Márk Szabó, PR and Security Writer, ESET explains that recently, the YouTube channel stacksmashing uploaded a video on breaking the built-in encryption in Windows, essentially bypassing Windows Disk Encryption on most devices using Microsoft’s globally dominant operating system with a cheap $10 tool.
Lucas Paus and Mario Micucci, the Security Researchers at ESET explain how to learn the cyber variety of CSI works, from sizing up the crime scene and hunting for clues to piecing together the story that the data has to tell
Phil Muncaster, guest writer at ESET talks about the heavy workloads and the spectre of personal liability for incidents that take a toll on security leaders, so much so that many of them look for the exits. What does this mean for corporate cyber-defenses?
ESET researchers have identified 12 Android espionage apps that share the same malicious code; six were available on Google Play. All the observed applications were advertised as messaging tools, apart from one that posed as a news app.